Page with the tools, materials, and other resources that participants in the OGL Workshop should download, install and/or bookmark. There is a section for each of the afternoon breakout modules.
The tool performs automatic syntax-based intra-language alignment. It performs automatic alignment of different versions of a text. Its concept is based on a modified version of the Needleman-Wunsch algorithm (for more information, see the Bibliography).
The tool allows automatic alignment between parallel texts in the same language. Its purpose is to display various degrees of textual variants based on syntactic alignment.
a social network analysis of publishers, writers, manuscripts, and booksellers in the late-fifteenth through eighteenth century England. Created by a team of English scholars and librarians, along with a computer scientist, this project allows English and history scholars to explore metadata compiled from the English Short Title Catalogue (ESTC) - a catalogue of every book printed in England between 1473 and 1800.
M. Springstein, S. Schneider, C. Althaus, and R. Ewerth. MM '22: The 30th ACM International Conference on Multimedia, Lisboa, Portugal, October 10 - 14, 2022, page 1107--1116. ACM, (2022)
D. Erdmann, and K. Vogel. Digital Turn und Historische Bildungsforschung. Bestandsaufnahme und Forschungsperspektiven, Julius Klinkhardt, Bad Heilbrunn, (2022)
V. Alexiev, and I. Nikolova. Data Sharing, Holocaust Documentation and the Digital Humanities. Best Practices, Benefits, Case Studies (DSDH 2017), Venice, Italy, (June 2017)
E. Losh, and J. Wernimont (Eds.) Debates in the digital humanities University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, Minn., (2018)Includes bibliographical references and index.